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Holiday Stress:
Fact or Friction?
by Mark Gorkin, LICSW
While many associate
the holidays with Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol, and its theme
of gaining and sharing the holiday spirit, the opening lines from A
Tale of Two Cities may have even more relevance:
It was the best
of times, it was the worst of time
It was the season of light, it was the season of darkness...
It was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.
Like Dickens, I too
have tried to capture the complexity of the holidays; if not through a
great novel, then with my one classic holiday joke. I realized with all
this talk of pressure during the holidays, I needed to distinguish between
"Holiday Blues" and "Holiday Stress." Now holiday
blues is the feeling of loss or sadness that you have over the holidays
when, for whatever reason, you can't be with those people who have been or
are special and significant. And holiday stress...is when you have
to be with some of those people!
Now here's some
lighthearted, seasonal verse I wrote years ago for my radio feature,
"Stress Brake." It's called "Cruisin for a Bluesin":
The holidays may
bring you down
And you just sing the blues.
To turn those soured tones around
Just play these "don'ts" and "dos."
When you're cruisin
on the town
Don't charge away the blues.
If you card the credit crown
Your spouse may blow a fuse.
For fussy dad the
streets you'll pound
To find the perfect muse.
He might as well be tied...and bound
He'll never change his views.
If you're alone,
don't be house bound
Or cuddle up to booze.
Go ahead. Drown a frown with tears
And folks who can amuse.
Why not try that
choral sound
Spread some joyous news.
For when the voices do resound
Then notes you can abuse.
This year don't play
the tragic clown
Be bold in how you choose.
You too can prance above the ground
Put on those dancing shoes.
So now we've come
full circle round
More lines I must refuse.
Just know when love and friends abound
The blues have many hues.
(c) Shrink Rap
Productions 1997
Despite this good
advice, we know that when you are with some of those people (or if they
are just in your head), real sparks can fly. Here are "The Four 'F's
of Holiday Friction: Fantasies, Family, Food and Finances."
1. Fantasies.
First, the idyllic image of the holidays portrayed by the media seems so
out of touch with reality, it's enough to make you overload on eggnog
(with or without the alcohol).
Another pressure is
the internalized memories we carry around. I recall my friend Linda, a
single parent at the time, berating herself because she couldn't keep up
with the holidays - the cooking, the shopping, the house decorations, etc.
- the way her mother had. Of course, Linda's mom did not work outside the
home. I also recall Linda observing that, as a successful professional,
she now has the money but lacks the time for the season. Previously, when
she wasn't working, she had plenty of time and no money: The "Holiday
Catch-22."
And, finally, this
season turns most of us into sentimental jelly fish, just waiting to get
entangled in the arms of that "true love." Hey, I'm not saying
that Mr. or Ms. Holiday Hopeful is as possible or as real as Santa Claus.
(My motto: "I no longer count on nor discount any possibility.")
Just don't let childhood longings and memories and voices transform you
into a frantic, salivating, love-crazed inner child.
The key to managing
this friction: gently embrace, don't cling, to magical memories. Discover
a blend of magical realism that helps you balance love, work and play in
the present.
2. Family.
There are so many permutations in families these days, it's got to get a
bit confusing. For separated families, a poignant question: which parent
(or grandparents) will we be with for Thanksgiving, for Christmas, for New
Years? I vividly remember an eight year old's lament: "Why can't we
just be one family again?"
Another common
family issue is when a holiday gathering turns into a competitive arena
for sibling rivalry, along with a desire for long-standing recognition and
approval. And if you find in these family therapy sessions, I mean holiday
reunions, that you can't resist trying to change the attitude and behavior
of the parent (sibling or child) that "makes you crazy,"
patterns which have resisted influence attempts for decades...maybe
there's only one solution. Have you thought about getting far out of town
for the holidays?
3. Food. The
holidays turn most of us into bingeaholics. Running helter skelter, not
stopping for lunch, overdosing on the cookies and chocolate that a
colleague has brought to work. And discipline at a party is a
contradiction in terms. (Just ask the Republicans.) This caloric chaos is
not surprising considering the biggest role model of the holidays looks
like he hasn't met a single gram of fat in two hundred years that he
doesn't love. Hey, Santa Claus hasn't been doing his Jane Fonda workouts
either. But wait...Appoint a designated nagger, who will gently remind you
when you are overdoing it. Don't chat hovering around the buffet table.
Take reasonable portions and move away. Now replace food with some food
for thought.
And face it, no
matter what you do, or don't do, you are likely to add some pounds on the
holidays. So go to the malls and walk briskly for thirty minutes before
you start the shopping splurge. You'll spend less and, probably, will eat
less as well.
4. Finances.
The holidays heighten our monetary consciousness -- from the end of the
year financial and psychological accounting (did we meet our
financial/family security and career goals?) to the never-ending list of
holiday gifts. And as the great Russian novelist, Doestoyevsky, noted:
"Consciousness is depression!"
For the first issue,
seek a budget counselor, a CPA, a career counselor or even a mental health
specialist. For the last, "just say no" to your child's
"toy lust." Give your child choices; explain why there are
limits. Try this holiday mantra: "Presence not just presents."
This season, invest time, not just money.
For big families, be
creative. Divide up the gift list with other relatives. You shouldn't have
to buy something for everyone. Making a gift definitely adds a personal
touch. And, finally, don't overlook a very important person. Get a special
gift for yourself.
So the holidays may
be a stressful time; a time of feelings of loss and sadness. But with a
little higher power humor it also, can be a source of creative expression
and sharing. Here's my gift to you:
Double-Edged
Depression
Waves of sadness
Raging river of fear
Whirlpooling madness
Till I disappear
Into the depths of primal pain
Then again...no pain, no gain.
Depression,
depression
Is it chemistry or confession?
Depression, depression
Dark side of perfection!
Climbing icy spires
Dancing at the ledge
The phoenix only rises
On the jagged edge
In a world of highs and lows
Hey, the cosmos ebbs and flows.
Depression,
depression
It's electrifried obsession
High flying depression
Exalted regression?
So I'm pumping iron
And Prozac, too
What else can
A real man do
In a life of muted dreams
How about a primal SCREAM?
Depression,
depression
Even inner child rejection
Depression, depression
Hallelujah for creative expression!
(c) Mark Gorkin 1994
Shrink Rap Productions
Just remember, for
the holidays and beyond... Practice Safe Stress!
Mark Gorkin, LICSW,
is a therapist, speaker, trainer, author and "Online Psychohumorist"
known throughout the internet, AOL and the nation as "The Stress
Doc." He specializes in stress, organizational change, team building,
career transition, creativity and HUMOR. Mark writes for such the national
publications as Treatment Today and Paradigm Magazine and for the popular
electronic newsletter Financial Services Journal Online. For more info
check his website at: http://www.stressdoc.com
or email StressDoc@aol.com. |